Stretched Tissue Mounting for MALDI Mass Spectrometry Imaging

Oct 21, 2011 - For a given instrumental platform and analyte class, the data ... MALDI matrix is then applied by either a robotic microspotter or an a...
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TECHNICAL NOTE pubs.acs.org/ac

Stretched Tissue Mounting for MALDI Mass Spectrometry Imaging Kevin R. Tucker, Eric J. Lanni, Leonid A. Serebryannyy, Stanislav S. Rubakhin, and Jonathan V. Sweedler* Department of Chemistry and the Beckman Institute, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801, United States

bS Supporting Information ABSTRACT: Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) combines information-rich chemical detection with spatial localization of analytes. For a given instrumental platform and analyte class, the data acquired can represent a compromise between analyte extraction and spatial information. Here, we introduce an improvement to the spatial resolution achievable with MALDI MSI conducted with standard mass spectrometric systems that also reduces analyte migration during matrix application. Tissue is placed directly on a stretchable membrane that, when stretched, fragments the tissue into micrometer-sized pieces. Scanning electron microscopy analysis shows that this process produces fairly homogeneous distributions of small tissue fragments separated and surrounded by areas of hydrophobic membrane surface. MALDI matrix is then applied by either a robotic microspotter or an artist’s airbrush. Rat spinal cord samples imaged with an instrumental resolution of 50 250 μm demonstrate lipid distributions with a 5-fold high spatial resolution (a 25-fold increase in pixel density) after stretching compared to tissues that were not stretched.

M

atrix assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry (MS) is a useful tool for the investigation of a variety of analyte classes including lipids,1 peptides,2 and proteins.3 In addition to obtaining mass spectra from compounds, the spatial localization of each analyte can be discerned by moving the sample under a focused laser beam.4 7 This technique, MALDI mass spectrometry imaging (MSI), generates information-rich, spatially resolved maps in which each sampled position contains a full mass spectrum; multiple ion images can be extracted from these maps to localize specific analytes.4 MSI has been used for several decades in the analysis of semiconductors with ion sources such as secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS).8 More recently, MSI using SIMS,9,10 MALDI,1,2,11 and desorption electrospray ionization12 MS have seen increasing use and application in biological and medical research.13 MSI of biological specimens is typically performed using thin tissue sections mounted to a microscope slide or metal target plate. For imaging small tissue features, the spatial resolution of the imaging technique becomes an important figure of merit. Spatial resolution can be limited by several factors including laser spot size, analyte concentration, and lateral analyte migration.11,14 Currently, the minimum laser spot size for an Nd:YAG laser used in commercially available MALDI MS instruments is on the order of 10 μm.15 There are some methods currently available that increase spatial resolution for MSI, including oversampling14,16 and sample stretching.17 21 Custom instruments are able to reach spatial resolutions below 1 μm.22 Regardless, many instruments have laser spot sizes of 50 μm or larger, making spot size a limiting factor. Limited analyte amounts can also affect the effective spatial resolution. When a 100 μm spot size is used, there is 100 times more material being analyzed than if the analysis were performed using a 10 μm spot size. This decrease in r 2011 American Chemical Society

sample analysis area typically results in a concomitant reduction in signal intensity, which can lead to some analytes falling below the instrument’s limit of detection.23 Analyte migration is another key parameter to consider when determining effective spatial resolution.24 The matrix application method is one of the most important factors that affects the degree of analyte migration and sensitivity that one achieves from a MALDI MSI experiment.24 Matrix is commonly applied via printing,3 spraying,2 or sublimation.25 When a MALDI matrix solution is applied, analyte molecules are extracted into the matrix layer while the matrix is solvated on the sample surface. However, solvated analytes also tend to redistribute laterally on the sample surface, thereby reducing the effective spatial resolution of the resulting image. A robotic chemical printer eliminates this migration by delivering an array of discrete droplets on the tissue. Moreover, because droplets can be reapplied to the same tissue location indefinitely, printing allows for extended extraction times without the redistribution of analytes beyond the radius wet by an individual droplet. However, spatial resolution becomes limited by the minimum droplet spacing achievable by the printer (typically >100 μm).3,19,24 Alternatively, an airbrush- or piezo-assisted spraying device can be used to coat the sample by producing small droplets (∼20 μm), forming a thin layer of solution on the sample surface, resulting in small matrix crystal sizes.26,27 Because of the smaller droplet and matrix crystal sizes, spraying provides relatively high spatial resolution with low analyte redistribution.24 In another approach, suitable for abundant, low molecular-weight species, a dry MALDI matrix can be Received: July 19, 2011 Accepted: October 21, 2011 Published: October 21, 2011 9181

dx.doi.org/10.1021/ac201857k | Anal. Chem. 2011, 83, 9181–9185

Analytical Chemistry sublimed onto the sample surface, effectively eliminating analyte redistribution.25 These matrix application techniques represent a compromise between analyte extraction and lateral analyte migration. The appropriate method is selected according to the specific experimental goals and required spatial resolution, as well as sample type and target analyte class(es). In a recently developed methodology, tissue is placed on an array of beads that have been directly mounted onto a stretchable membrane.17 21,28 30 After stretching the membrane, the tissue adhering to the beads is fragmented into small, bead-sized samples surrounded by a hydrophobic substrate, which are then interrogated with MSI. Here, we demonstrate that the beads are not always needed: the tissue still fragments when placed directly on the hydrophobic membrane. These stretching approaches reduce cationic adducts and enhance MSI spatial resolution, especially in cases where raster spacing is limited to >50 μm by either the matrix application method or the laser spot size. We validate this technique by imaging lipids from the rat spinal cord, a well-studied and well-characterized neuronal model system.

’ EXPERIMENTAL SECTION Chemicals. All chemicals were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO and used without further modification. Sample Preparation. Adult Sprague-Dawley male rats (University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign) were sacrificed by decapitation, and their spinal cords were surgically removed. This procedure followed animal use protocols approved by the University of Illinois Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee and in accordance with all state and federal regulations. The spinal cords were then flash frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at 80 °C until use. Each spinal cord was affixed to the sectioning stage using deionized water as the mounting media. Spinal cord sections of 14 μm thickness were prepared at 20 °C using a Leica CM 3050 S cryostat (Leica Microsystems, Bannockburn, IL). Several adjacent sections were thaw-mounted onto indium tin oxide (ITO)-coated glass microscope slides (Delta Technologies, Stillwater, MN) as control samples. Other sections were thaw-mounted directly onto Parafilm-M (Pechiny Plastic Packaging, Chicago, IL) substrates for stretched samples. The Parafilm-M substrate samples were returned to the cryostat chamber and allowed to reach 20 °C in order to refreeze the tissue sections. Each substrate was then placed facedown against a clean stainless steel block in the chamber, while pressure was applied using a second cold ( 20 °C) stainless steel block to provide better adhesion, which aids the stretching process. After removing the tissue from the chamber, a warm puff of air (∼36 °C) applied to the back of the substrate thaws the tissue and softens the Parafilm-M prior to stretching, as described previously.17 The substrates were then stretched at least 5-fold in each direction for an increase of at least 25-fold in area. Stretching was performed manually under visual control by monitoring the natural symmetry of the spinal cord in dorsal/ventral and lateral directions. Manual stretching is preferred over automated micromanipulator-based stretching because tactile feedback allows greater control and more effective determination of maximal Parafilm-M expansion. Uniform stretching was determined by measuring the stretched tissue and comparing it to a serial section that was not stretched. After the MSI experiment, the images were independently adjusted in the x and y directions based on the stretching factor so that the final images had the same proportions as the native

TECHNICAL NOTE

Table 1. Summary of Tissue Fragment Size Based on ESEM Imaging of Stretched Samples Demonstrating That the Fragment Size Is Sufficiently Small to Image Samples at 50 μm Spatial Resolution image

fragments counted

fragments longer than 50 μm (count/percentage)

avg. length (μm)

gray 1

283

4/1.4%

13.2

gray 2

204

9/4.4%

16.0

gray 3

205

1/0.5%

13.2

total gray

692

14/2.0%

14.1

white 1

133

1/0.8%

12.3

white 2 white 3

217 250

3/1.4% 0/0%

14.3 12.1

600

4/0.01%

12.9

1292

18/1.4%

13.5

total white total fragments

tissue. If greater control during manual stretching is required, the application of a grid design to the back of the Parafilm-M provides visual feedback regarding nonuniform expansion of the sample. The stretched samples were then placed over ITO slides, which provides both a conductive surface that aids for MALDI analysis and the clear transparency needed for bright field microscopy imaging.19,21 The samples were stored at 80 °C until use. Prior to use, all samples were dried under nitrogen gas. Samples for MALDI MSI were transferred to a chemical inkjet printer (ChIP-1000, Shimadzu, Tokyo, Japan) for matrix printing or were mounted onto a slide holder for matrix application via an artist’s airbrush. Additional serial sections were kept for tissue fragment sizing experiments and as references for measuring the unstretched dimensions of tissue sections. Environmental Scanning Electron Microscopy (ESEM) Analysis. Three stretched samples on ITO-coated microscope slides were mounted individually in a sputter coater (DeskJet II TSC, Denton Vacuum LLC, Moorestown, NJ) and coated with approximately 7 nm-thick AuPd. Slides were affixed to an ESEM sample mount using carbon tape; a small amount of silver paint was applied on the edges of the slides to make electrical contact between the sample surface and the mount. Samples were imaged on a Philips XL30 ESEM-FEG (FEI Co., Hillsboro, OR) operating in standard high-vacuum mode with a beam energy of 10 kV and a working distance of 11.6 mm using the Robinson Series 6 scintillator-type backscattered electron detector for improved relief contrast of the tissue surface. The collected images were analyzed using the “Threshold” and “Analyze Particle” functions within ImageJ, version 1.43u (developed at the US National Institutes of Health and available on the Internet at http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/), in order to isolate the tissue fragments and determine their average size, as summarized in Table 1. ChIP-1000 Matrix Application. Rat spinal cord samples, both stretched and unstretched, were individually loaded into the ChIP-1000 printer while nitrogen gas was flowing into the printing chamber and onto a modified stainless steel sample holder plate. An optical image of each spinal cord section was obtained using the on-board optical scanner. The ChIP-1000 was then used to deposit a MALDI matrix of 10 nL of 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB, 25 mg/mL) at 250 μm center-to-center spacing between each spot by repeatedly depositing multiple bursts, each being five ∼100 pL drops across the entire tissue sample. The ChIP-1000 was found to be capable of reproducible 9182

dx.doi.org/10.1021/ac201857k |Anal. Chem. 2011, 83, 9181–9185

Analytical Chemistry

TECHNICAL NOTE

Table 2. Comparative Analysis of Different MALDI MSI Sample Preparation Approaches Showing the Improvement in the Obtained Imaging Spatial Resolution

a

sample type

prestretched X

prestretched Y

stretched X

stretched Y

area

effective pixel

pixel density

(imaging raster step)

(mm)

(mm)

(mm)

(mm)

enhancement

size (μm)

(pixel/mm2)

printed (250 μm) stretched printed (250 μm)

5.0 5.0

3.5 3.5

NA 29.5

NA 18.8

NA 31.6

250 44

16 506

sprayed (50 μm)

4.3

3.1

NA

NA

NA

50

400

stretched sprayed (200 μm)

4.3

3.1

31.9

18.1

43.3

30

1083

stretched sprayed (100 μm)

3.9

2.5

25.5

15.3

40.0

16

stretched sprayeda (50 μm)

3.9

2.5

25.5

15.3

40.0

7.9

4001 16 004

Results shown are from the image shown in the Supporting Information, Figure S6.

printing at a minimum of 250 μm spacing for the unstretched tissues and was used for all subsequent samples. Airbrush Matrix Application. Bright field microscopy images were taken of each sample with an AxioVert 200 fluorescence light microscope (Carl Zeiss, Inc., Jena, Germany) for alignment within the MALDI instrument. Samples were then spray-coated with 3 5 mL of a 25 mg/mL solution of DHB in 50:50 acetone/ water using an airbrush held at a distance of 15 cm, propelled by compressed nitrogen. Multiple coats were applied until the sample exhibited thin, homogeneous DHB crystals across the tissue section, as monitored using a low power light microscope. MALDI Mass Spectrometry. The mass spectra were collected in positive ion mode on an UltrafleXtreme MALDI TOF/TOF mass spectrometer (Bruker Daltonics, Bremen, Germany) equipped with a frequency tripled Nd:YAG solid state laser using the FlexImaging 2.1 software package (Bruker Daltonics). At each raster position, 250 spectra were acquired at 500 Hz, summed, and saved for analysis. MSI was performed using varying raster spacing (50, 100, or 200 μm) for sprayed samples, as noted in Table 2. All ChIP-1000 printed samples were imaged at 250 μm spacing to align with the printed matrix pattern. The laser spot size was adjusted to match the step size being used. The largest setting possible was used in all cases using a 50 μm spot size for the 50 μm raster and a 95 μm spot size for the 100 μm raster. The laser was defocused to its largest spot size (∼150 μm) for imaging the 200 and 250 μm step size samples. As is common during MALDI MSI data analysis, images were normalized using the normalization function built into FlexImaging to account for differences in matrix application and/or ion yield. Analyte identification was based on mass matches to lipids previously identified within the rat spinal cord.1,12,31 Four rat spinal cords were serially sectioned, with multiple sections used for analyses; at least six MSI experiments from each combination of matrix application and mounting technique were performed.

’ RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Approaches aimed at improving spatial resolution and analyte extraction/incorporation into MALDI matrix crystals are important as MSI strives to achieve higher spatial resolutions while maintaining its coverage of the metabolome, peptidome, or proteome. Whereas many improvements have been focused on the optics and instrumentation, we have concentrated our efforts on sample preparation. Here, we describe an approach whereby spinal cord tissue was directly thaw-mounted onto a membrane and stretched, fragmenting the sample into pieces separated by relatively broad

Figure 1. Schematic of the technique used to stretch and image tissue sections. (Top left) Thin tissue sections are serially cut; (bottom left) the sections are thaw mounted, frozen, and pressed onto the membrane surface to provide better adhesion, which aids the stretching process; (right) stretching produces a final sample with at least a 25-fold increase in tissue section area resulting from at least a 5-fold increase in the x and y directions.

hydrophobic areas of membrane surface (see Figure 1). Spinal cord is well suited as a model system as it is chemically well characterized, contains larger neuron soma, and has regions of heavily myelinated processes that are more difficult to fragment than other central nervous system tissue. Manual stretching of the membrane may produce some regional differences, disproportionate stretching, and/or rotational repositioning of individual tissue pieces; however, with practice, the user can reduce these effects. After one is comfortable with stretching tissues on membranes, the technique becomes quick and robust. Following tissue stretching, ESEM analysis was performed to characterize the resulting tissue fragments. As shown in Figure 2, individual ESEM images of both gray and white matter were analyzed by manually thresholding each one in order to differentiate tissue fragments from “stretch marks” formed on the membrane surface during sample preparation. The tissue fragments were fit to an elliptical approximation using the long axis as the “fragment size”, and from this parameter, a fragment-size distribution was determined. The thresholding data, which were collected from imaging three separate regions of gray matter and three regions of white matter from three spinal cord sections using ESEM, are summarized in Table 1. Tissue fragments were found to be relatively homogeneous with an average size of 14.1 and 12.9 μm for gray matter and white matter, respectively. Furthermore, only 2.0% and 0.01% of the gray and white matter fragments, respectively, were found to be larger than 50 μm. 9183

dx.doi.org/10.1021/ac201857k |Anal. Chem. 2011, 83, 9181–9185

Analytical Chemistry

TECHNICAL NOTE

Figure 3. Improvement in spatial resolution using this approach, shown in images of PC 38:4 (m/z 810.6) distributions in the rat spinal cord. Tissue size is given in parentheses after each panel’s description. (Top row) Native tissue samples (without stretching): (A) ChIP-1000 printed matrix application analyzed at 250 μm resolution (5.0  3.5 mm), (B) sprayed matrix application analyzed at 50 μm resolution (4.3  3.1 mm), and (C) a zoomed in image from (B) showing the right dorsal region (1.9  2.5 mm). (Bottom row) Stretched tissue samples imaged with (D) ChIP-1000 matrix printing at 250 μm spacing (29.5  18.8 mm), sprayed matrix application analyzed at (E) 200 μm spacing (31.9  18.1 mm) and (F) 100 μm raster spacing (25.5  15.3 mm; shown is the right dorsal portion measuring 12.1  8.4 mm). The images are shown in thermal color scale where white and red represent high intensity and blue and black represent low intensity. Additional ion images can be found in the Supporting Information.

Figure 2. ESEM images of stretched spinal cord sections. (Bottom) Stretched image showing the tissue fragments. (Top and Middle) Images processed to allow automated fragment identification and illustrate that most tissue features are